How a rehab boss exploited the drug epidemic – with impunity
For years, a drug rehab program in
Participants at
"It's like slavery," said
This article was provided to The Associated Press by the nonprofit news outlet Reveal from
Amid a nationwide opioid epidemic, the poor and desperate have become easy prey for rehabs that promise freedom from addiction - for free. To pay for their stay, participants must work full-time jobs and surrender their wages. But many programs cash in on the free labor and turn their participants into indentured servants, an ongoing investigation by Reveal has found.
Recovery Connections was started in 2011 by
Warren put participants to work baby-sitting her children and cleaning her home while she vacationed in
Some former participants told Reveal that the program helped them get clean. Others left the program worse off than when they arrived or turned to drugs to cope. Many participants told Reveal that they fled into the mountains, sometimes in the rain or snow or in the middle of the night.
Warren declined to answer questions but defended her program on Facebook.
"Because of the structure of this kind of program, many people leave with resentments and are disgruntled," she wrote. "I have spent the majority of my adult life trying to give back."
Participants worked at nine adult care homes over the years. Some worked as janitors and cooks, but the majority worked as personal care aides.
In
At least seven rehab workers have been accused of sexual misconduct or assault of patients at the homes, dozens of former participants and employees said. Former employees said none of the allegations were reported to authorities, as required by law. Reveal could find no mention of the alleged assaults in thousands of pages of police reports,
One male rehab worker was accused of sexually assaulting a disabled elderly woman in the shower at
Drug thefts also were common. Participants snorted prescription pain pills, swallowed droplets of morphine from used medical syringes and peeled fentanyl pain patches off patients and sucked them to get high, according to former participants and employees.
"Lots of people relapsed and got high that way," said
"We do not take any report of abuse, neglect, assault, theft or drug use lightly," Damiani said.
The state
If she described Recovery Connections as a "12-step, self-help" program, Warren would qualify for a licensing exemption, the investigator told her, according to state reports.
The complaints - forced labor, self-dealing and abuse - continued to pour in. But each time, the department declined to investigate, citing the exemption.
After Reveal questioned officials about the program, the department ordered Recovery Connections on Wednesday to stop sending participants to work at the homes, potentially cutting off the rehab's main source of funding.
Other agencies also neglected complaints.
For years, people sent to Recovery Connections by the courts have complained to the state
Richardson fled four months later. She was so scarred by the experience that she vowed never to attend rehab again.
"It's not right to take advantage and subject people to abuse like that when they're trying to better their lives," she said.
On
But, so far, hospitals and short-term treatment centers continue to send people to the program. So do social workers at state-funded detox and psychiatric facilities.
This article was provided to The Associated Press by the nonprofit news outlet Reveal from
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